Common issues … and suggestions for improvements

Month: October 2015

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Some time ago, I wrote an article The Impact of Climate Geoengineering on Agriculture, where I presented the results of the decade long climate geoengineering found by some American authors. I thought I was already done with this hence I couldn’t do much. Then the sky started looking more and more like in a science fiction.

Strange hallo around the Sun

Again, I thought I’m done with this topic, and guess what, I stumbled upon an article Nano-weapons: Tomorrow’s Global Security Threat, where the author Greg Bonadies writes about three decades old idea presented by Eric Drexler (1980, 1986) about “kinematic cellular automata, built from reconfigurable molecular modules.” Or, as they are called today: self-replicating nano-robots (replibots). The general idea is that the genetic engineering and nanotechnology enable the scientists to produce self-replicating nano-robots (synthetic DNA) that perform various tasks when they attach themselves to the host. A host could be any living being that has a DNA and RNA, cells. No insane idea is farfetched enough for the military, and self-replicating nano-robots seem to be an ideal weapon – invisible to the naked eye and programmed to perform the tasks with the utmost nano precision, without any losses. The ideal soldiers, thus. Actually, it is all in one, weapon that threatens to destroy all life on the planet and the ideal soldiers that perform the task invisibly no matter what.

While I was gathering material to write the article for my blog issuesandsuggestions.wordpress.com, I came across Morgellons, as those affected call them. What those victims describe, resembles the working of the self-replicating nano-robots (replibots), described in Greg Bonadies article. So, I guess, they might have been already tested.

Actually they have been tested already. In Plaid Zebra we can read that DNA nanobots will target cancer cells in the first human trial using a terminally ill patient (27th March, 2015). The next one in the same web magazine we can read that Engineers just developed nano-robots that can reduce CO2 levels by 88% in seawater (10th October, 2015). It seems that nanobots are in full swing, and the pattern is the same as usual. First, the human concerns are addressed and made public, so it all looks benevolent and goodhearted. But usually, behind the scenes, some other development might go on. So, if we believe that the nanobots are going to be used solely for benevolent purpose, then we haven’t read enough history books. Like for instance the paragraph below – it does make us presume that the cause of the so called Morgellon disease is nonobots. So, were the victims chosen deliberately or was this some experiment gone wrong?

Now 71, Mitchell has been ill for eight years, which she describes as a “survival blur.” In fact, she’s been sick throughout her whole life — polio, scarlet fever, dengue, abscessed ovaries — and now suffers from the skin disorder Morgellons, a “weird, incurable disease that seems like it’s from outer space,” which many doctors find mysterious, and which Mitchell has described this way: “Fibers in a variety of colors protrude out of my skin like mushrooms after a rainstorm. They cannot be forensically identified as animal, vegetable, or mineral.”

Now, maybe watching this happening might not be enough for life on the planet we live upon. I wonder, how would it be if the sky would be given the same status as national parks have, where no experiments and other atrocities (wars, for instance) are allowed. Just how many people would have to sign such a petition for the UN to give the sky the same status and rights as the national parks on Earth have?

It seems that humans mostly exist in punishing mode. Being punished and punishing. From the early years on, we are being brought up between reward and punishment. We are so used to it that most of us hardly do things differently. Maybe punishments became less physically abusive, or revengeful, and maybe we are unaware of it, but punishing mode it is. Besides punishing mode, humans exhibit owning mode. We behave like we are owners of the land and what’s upon, above and beneath it. We behave like we own our relatives to certain extent or sometimes even entirely, even though in reality we could own only our spirit, soul, mind and body – these four are truly our own. Because of this prevalent owning mode, we actually don’t own ourselves, but are owned to a certain extent by those who surround us, by those who reside in our hearts, or by the owners of the ideas that reside in our minds. Just think of all the ideas of video games, commercials and all the wrong ideas we were taught in school. In some societies humans are just the ownership of their parents or others. Not everyone on the planet is willing to own another person’s mind, heart, spirit, or body. One feels truly lucky to meet this kind of people. Where there is ownership, there is the need to control the property: is it still there, is it still behaving properly, etc. And, when the property doesn’t behave according to the set of proprietor’s ideas, the property is punished on the scale of punishment severity. The scale of punishment severity ranges from reminding to destroying (with a very broad spectrum of ideas, deeds, and applied means). And, humans use lots of imagination to invent punishing methods and their implementation. Tons of human energy is invested in this endeavor alone. It seems a true Koyaanisqatsi.